i don't have a bav, but don't know where else to really post this...
will try and make this as brief as possible but i am covering many years here. i am a 35 year old male with an aorticroot of 4.2, first found in 2004. In 2004, i felt like i was having a rapidheart beat and palpitations, for which among other things an echo was performed. an aorticroot of 4.2 was found and to be honest in my 20's I didn't really understand the impact. I continued to workout, lift VERY heavy weights (boarder line body building), etc. all against doctors orders. as more time went by i actually forgot about this diagnosis, and just happily did whatever i wanted. i was ~168 pounds and benched nearly 300#'s. in 2011 i had an echo for some chest pain, which was 100% normal (aorticroot was 3.7). I was shocked because I recalled the 4.2 reading from years earlier, only after the doc mentioned it was a normal echo.... meh, i kept lifting (heavy) though the heaviest i did was ~ 100# dumbells on bench press...
In 2012 i went for another echo to follow-up and the 4.2 reading was again there (likely an error in 2011). This 4.2 was confirmed via CT. cardiologist was not very concerned but limited me to reps of 12-15 on weights. told me to go see a surgeon if i was that uneasy. i did exactly that and now have a much more serious set of limitations (from surgeon) and as a 35 year old I understand the severity. i was also told these things usually grow .1cm a year and surgery would be a likely outcome in ~7 years. to be honest i can't mentally get it out of my head, i was much better off with the ignorance is bliss approach i had from 2004 to 2012... i did just send the records from 2004 to the surgeon this past friday and i am awaiting response.
just curious if anyone else has one which is very stable. is it possible a 4.2cm root can stay 4.2? is there a way to assess wall thickness of the aorta? what is the best resource for my questions?
with the costs of medical appt's its not like i can go see 5 different cardiologists...
i want to run, i want to jog, i want to lift... arg...
will try and make this as brief as possible but i am covering many years here. i am a 35 year old male with an aorticroot of 4.2, first found in 2004. In 2004, i felt like i was having a rapidheart beat and palpitations, for which among other things an echo was performed. an aorticroot of 4.2 was found and to be honest in my 20's I didn't really understand the impact. I continued to workout, lift VERY heavy weights (boarder line body building), etc. all against doctors orders. as more time went by i actually forgot about this diagnosis, and just happily did whatever i wanted. i was ~168 pounds and benched nearly 300#'s. in 2011 i had an echo for some chest pain, which was 100% normal (aorticroot was 3.7). I was shocked because I recalled the 4.2 reading from years earlier, only after the doc mentioned it was a normal echo.... meh, i kept lifting (heavy) though the heaviest i did was ~ 100# dumbells on bench press...
In 2012 i went for another echo to follow-up and the 4.2 reading was again there (likely an error in 2011). This 4.2 was confirmed via CT. cardiologist was not very concerned but limited me to reps of 12-15 on weights. told me to go see a surgeon if i was that uneasy. i did exactly that and now have a much more serious set of limitations (from surgeon) and as a 35 year old I understand the severity. i was also told these things usually grow .1cm a year and surgery would be a likely outcome in ~7 years. to be honest i can't mentally get it out of my head, i was much better off with the ignorance is bliss approach i had from 2004 to 2012... i did just send the records from 2004 to the surgeon this past friday and i am awaiting response.
just curious if anyone else has one which is very stable. is it possible a 4.2cm root can stay 4.2? is there a way to assess wall thickness of the aorta? what is the best resource for my questions?
with the costs of medical appt's its not like i can go see 5 different cardiologists...
i want to run, i want to jog, i want to lift... arg...